Now is an AWFUL time to try and build/buy a new PC.
SO:
Here's the thing. The hardware market is really heavy into a transition period right now. Memory is moving from DDR4 to DDR5, CPUs are moving from monolithic (single) chips to multi-chip packages, the GPU market is also moving from monolithic to "chiplet" packaging, motherboards are moving from PCIe v4 to PCIe v5, and even onboard Ethernet is moving from 1 Gigabit to 2.5 Gigabit. On top of these, there are multiple other interconnect standards warring for dominance that might completely change or even replace current RAM and even PCIe tech. SSDs in your RAM slots? CAMMs instead of SO-DIMMs? Stacked caches? CXL memory? About the only thing that
isn't changing is the sound hardware, mostly thanks to pressure from the entertainment industry not wanting to open up any new avenues for potential piracy. We also have the fallout from all that greedy scalping, both as a shortage of parts and also as an "opportunity" on the part of hardware manufacturers (most notably NVIDIA). What this all adds up to is that building any computer that you plan to use for any length of time is
very complicated, since not only will the "good" parts end up being expensive, but there is the very real chance that personal computer technology
in general might change substantially over even the next five years.
The hardware specs you post on that Alienware system aren't actually that bad. A 4090 is THE card to get these days, the 13900KF is probably going to be a gaming monster (but the F suffix means it won't come with
QuickSync if you were hoping to use that for anything). My only real criticisms would be the following:
- Not enamored of Windows 11 right now (it's okay, you could always use the included W11 license to downgrade to Windows 10 if you want).
- You should step up to 64GB RAM (2x32) instead of the 32(2x16). You only get 2 RAM slots, might as well max them.
- You should step up to a 2TB NVMe SSD instead of the 1TB SSD. A 4TB option is available but that's much more expensive.
- You should probably get at least a 2TB HDD instead of the 1TB HDD. Or skip the HDD entirely and just install one of your own later.
- Never a huge fan (heh) of liquid cooling, but that's just because you always have to plan for the day they start to leak.
- Of the three choices, avoid the Realtek WiFi card (if you can). It's the only one that doesn't support WiFi 6E. That'll be important later.
- Make sure they include the 1350W PSU. Having the 4090 means they're supposed to do that by default, but...just make sure.
As far as "conventional" PCs go, it has all the right parts (except for the recommended upgrades I mention above). I guess my only real beef(s) with it are Win11 (largely because of the TPM requirement) and the liquid cooling.
As I already grudgingly said in the other thread, any "new" builds these days should probably use the 4080 or 4090 GPUs. I say grudgingly because NVIDIA is deliberately overcharging for these cards, to the tune of at least US$200-400 or so, solely
because they can*. In effect, they decided to scalp the cards themselves rather than let someone else keep all that extra money. The AMD 7900-series cards are ...okay, but they basically suffer from the same sort of problem that AMD's old
Bulldozer CPU lineup did, except now in GPUs. AMD basically doubled up the number of compute units (CUs) but only has one path feeding every pair of CUs, which means performance is going to be lower when all those cores can't be kept fed. I'm sure they are amazing with certain specific workloads, but I feel like SOMEbody should've realized they already tried this kind of thing before, and seen the challenges coming. And Intel's GPU is not ready for prime time. NVIDIA knows all this, which is why they are charging out the wazoo for their top cards, and why the 4080 and 4090 are literally "the only cards worth getting" in 2022.
So...is it a good system for Q4 2022? Yes. Especially if you upgrade the RAM and SSD. But it didn't need to be that expensive. But it is.
--Patrick
The MSRP for last generation's "pro" NVIDIA card, the A6000 (based on the same "Ampere" chip as the RTX 3090) was
US$4650. The refreshed A6000 "Ada Edition" (based on the RTX 4090's chip), though?
US$7350. Or more.